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Draftergirl, thanks for posting about your experience. My doctor has mentioned this procedure, although no firm discussion has taken place. I appreciate hearing your thoughts on the whole process and the relief your getting. Take care and low pain wishes to you, EE
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Looking for help
Marissa-
It sounds like I am in the same boat as you - suffering from ON and TN. I am curious is yours bilateral? Have you found the cause? Anything you've found that helps with he pain? I am trying to stay strong but gradually starting to lose hope and finding I can't cope with the increasing pain. I am thinking it would be nice to have someone else going through this to talk to. I am starting to feel very alone since no one in my life understands why I am not up for social events anymore. Ali in Colorado |
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Another New Member
I'm also a new member to this forum and have both occipital neuralgia, cervical dystonia, mtbi, chronic daily headaches, post-traumatic migraines, post-traumatic stress disorder. All resulting from Oct 2008 car accident.
I have found, like many of you, ways to cope -- and try to take it one day at a time. I too was an extremely active person, at the pinnacle of a great career and at a good point in my marriage after 29 years. I have tried everything suggested to me -- accupuncture, aggressive physical therapy, certain medications, Botox injection therapy. I'm curious about the fusions -- did you have damaged or herniated discs? I'm glad you have had some relief from them, but have learned that one "cure" can be to the detriment of other affected areas. I'm also curious about the cervical spinal cord stimulator -- how that works. It cured your ON. I hope your neck pain will also diminish as well. The reality is that however we were injured, whatever our medical diagnoses are, we personally have to deal with it. Friends/family are compassionate, want to take the pain away -- but I have found it difficult for them to really understand. It's easy to see the pain someone may have with a broken limb in a cast -- but is difficult to see the pain we have in our heads. It's difficult to describe the pain -- mine changes depending on Botox schedule (every 3 months), on how much I push and then am exhausted. My brain tells me when it's power is about to turn off. I literally feel like the Energizer Bunny that drums across the floor and just stops. That happens to me. I almost collapse sometimes. Sleep is one of the best ways to heal my head -- even at times when it's extremely difficult to lay it down. I have spent many nights propped up so that my occipitals aren't pushing on the pillow. I think crying can be a good thing -- as is talking with others that understand. I keep a daily diary and that helps. Some times I write "same as yesterday -- same old story". We all have to make new lives, and I think I have concluded after almost 2 years that, I won't be returning to my former life. It's just how it is. I have to retrain my brain in many areas, but the hardest retraining is for others around us. They need to understand and ACCEPT our limitations. I do housework if and when I can; luckily have a daughter still at home helping with groceries, the dog, other daily tasks. I have a consulation with a doctor next week who is a cervical chiropractor. She said I sound like a prime candidate. We'll see. Would love to avoid any surgery on my neck. Thanks for listening... |
hello
I am glad you found this site. I am new too, only a week or so. I have found support for sure. My emotions are under control for the moment. I am sorry you are suffering. There are people who indeed know about suffering and will help you to cope. I have let go my housekeeping too, it gets done alot slower too. I prefer reading a book. I am trying to do those things that help me to cope with my current problems. You will find comfort and help here with alot of good people who care about you. We are all the human family, and need each other. Ginnie:grouphug:
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I can relate
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I have had 2 MVD surgeries to fix the TN. they did find a compression. this was after many months on different drugs, wrong MRI Images, drugs quit working. finally found a near dr that did the right MRI, found the compression, did MVD and I was pain free from TN for almost 8 weeks and then came back. I did have severe pain in back of my head similar to TN from the moment I woke up from surgery. kept telling everyone something was wrong in back of head. I had a second MVD to figure out why my TN pain was back and new neurosurgeon found that I needed more padding at the outer limits. this helped stop the TN pain again. I then had a third surgery to look at the back of my head and they found my occipital nerve was shredded. they think it probably got caught in the retractor during the first surgery by how the nerve was shredded and where my first MVD incision was. none of the anti seizure meds have helped and I am now using fentanyl and precocet for break thru. only shaves off the worst of pain. I am now scheduled to have a stimulator placed in 2 weeks with the final placement 2 days after trial is over, if it is successful. I have decided to try to talk about my experience in hopes that it will help others. Easygoing |
richjobeman
hi,Ican feel your pain,I have oc and it gets into my face,mainly on my left side,scalp a little on my right.I do the steroid inj. every 3 weeks,I think that helps,if you do them every18 to 19 days.I have been told that tn can be fixed with certain surgeries but the oc is harder to fix.But I think the stimulater could be helpful,there a couple of new things out there that could work.I`m thinking about trying the stim.How did this happen to you?That could be factors on getting better.The pain can be soooooooooooooo bad,but maybe we will all find a way to get better!!!
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Making headway
Maybe I can throw some hope your way.
I have been dealing with Tregeminal Neuralgia for 6 months now. Long story but the TN started while I was in massage therapy school last August while learning to repair old injuries on my self. I was getting "popped" more than 50 times per minute and some events would last 5 to 30 seconds. I saw a chiropractor to make sure my neck was where it should be (or just pull my head off if it couldn't be fixed) and he adjusted me, next I went back to school and had one of my instructors work on my neck. Two weeks later the TN was gone...for two months. It came back about five weeks ago in 15 second bursts that put me to my knees. I am a Certified Massage Therapist now and have been treating my own TN. I have reduced the shocks to two or three pops on my first bite of food in each meal but it goes away after that and I can eat in peace...until the next meal. I would consider it weight control but I'm 6'1" and only 150 lbs and need all I can get. Look into Trigger Points, I had hundreds of the little knots in my shoulders and neck. As I work the knots out of my neck my TN is getting better. I have enough circumstantial evidence right now to convince me that I am effecting the TN and keeping it at bay for the time being. I expect to have it gone in the next couple of months if my treatments continue to advance like they are right now. You will need a good medical massage therapist. I have been treating my own but it is not easy, other therapists who I have consulted have been very surprised that I could effect my own trigger points and remove them. It takes relaxation of the specific muscle group and then applying pressure to the point to relieve the cramped muscle location. Its a pat your head rub your tummy type of deal and not easy to do but you can get it done. At the moment, if I go a day without working on my neck muscles it starts getting worse by day's end, but it is mostly calm with two or three five-minute sessions a day. I believe that as I remove knots in my spinal column and shoulder I'll find the one pressing on the nerve that lights up my cheek, lip, eye, and teeth and I'll be done with this. I'm in northern California and I'd be happy to answer any questions you or others have, right here. KBCMT |
SURGERY?! Someone better have a very good reason and a lot of proof before I'd go there.
I am now a massage therapist trained in medical massage therapy, I did this to treat myself and where this goes from here... I'm not real focused on that right now. I am not a doctor (nor have I played on on TV). I cannot diagnose or prescribe any drugs or methods or tell you that this will work for you. This is all my OPINION and should be taken as such. DO YOUR OWN HOMEWORK. I have an update on my TN since my last post. I have found the cervical vertebra (C-7) that seems to be causing my TN. As I have been relieving the knots (trigger points, look it up!) in my neck my TN has been shifting in severity and location. I see that as a good sign. There is an extremely tender spot on the left side of C-7 that causes a pressure feeling in my neck, behind my left eye, and at the bottom of my left Scapula when I push on it (this is a classic trigger point). This has taken 6 months to locate and I'm still not 100% sure I have it. This morning I got hit again and as my face lit up I poked into the C-7 location a few times and as I got the angle just right and pushed in the TN stopped. I have stopped the TN three times today just by pushing on that same spot when I get it. One of the indications that you have a trigger point is that when you push directly on the amorphous point, the pain in other areas of the body (side of my face) will stop. This has worked with many tender spots on me and ii recognize the relief when it happens. I believe most people have one or more of these trigger points that is causing the TN. I have been going to school since last April to learn about Myofacial release of trigger points. My TM symptoms fit right in with the symptoms that trigger points cause in other areas of the body and now I have found even more reasons to be hopeful of trigger points causing my TM, and hundreds of other people as well. I started the schooling to be a medical massage therapist because I have been trying to find relief for shoulder, neck, and hip pains, that no one can explain (until now) and Worker's Comp (started as a workplace injury) kicked me out and gave me a few bucks and told me to find my own way to relief (in so many words). So, I did. I have stopped all my hip pain, most of my shoulder pain (although I still get up several nights a week to take a hot shower and calm down the trigger points that wake me up with a fire like pain) which is about one fifth of the pain I was in one year ago. Here is a list of what I've been learning and is printed on the back of my business card. I'm not really in business yet because of the TM but I do have insurance, a business lic., I have been helping other with severe pains at no charge and have had spectacular results according to the friends I have helped. Medical massage addresses many problems including: Frozen Shoulder - Knee Pain Neck and Back Pain Tendonitis Trigger Finger Auto/Work/Sports Injuries Whiplash Scar Tissue Mastectomy Pain Associated with Arthritis Sciatica Heel Spur Problems walking or climbing stairs Carpal Tunnel Improved Athletic Performance Fibromyalgia Trigger Points And Trigiminal Neuralgia I have worked on and had varying success with all of these conditions except Fibromyalgia, and that's because no one has come forward yet for me to attempt relief. I worked on my neck/TM for several hours today and the TM is a little touchy right now so I'm not going to taunt it much more for today. The first thing I would look for to see if my TM was caused by knots in my body would be to have someone look at me standing upright and see if I have a head-forward posture (which I do). Besides that Whiplash can start TM if it has gone on for a long time. These "knots" can and do last in your body for many years. I have removed and had removed, spots that date back to 1972 when I spent a Thanksgiving night, all night, loading four-turkey pans into ovens at one of my first jobs. That Sciatica pain lasted for 24 years until I had the trigger point removed from my spine last year. That's why my hip no longer has any pain. Anyway, watch out for doctors who want to cut. Most doctors who can't find an answer to problems always wnnt to cut for exploratory reasons or want to give pain pills to shut me up. I think I have a better way and I'm just trying to spread the information so everyone can look at a different method of solving a problem. For what its worth, KBCMT |
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